[+/-]
SHOW BINARY LOGS SyntaxSHOW BINLOG EVENTS SyntaxSHOW CHARACTER SET SyntaxSHOW COLLATION SyntaxSHOW COLUMNS SyntaxSHOW CREATE DATABASE SyntaxSHOW CREATE TABLE SyntaxSHOW DATABASES SyntaxSHOW ENGINE SyntaxSHOW ENGINES SyntaxSHOW ERRORS SyntaxSHOW GRANTS SyntaxSHOW INDEX SyntaxSHOW INNODB STATUS SyntaxSHOW LOGS SyntaxSHOW MASTER STATUS SyntaxSHOW OPEN TABLES SyntaxSHOW PRIVILEGES SyntaxSHOW PROCESSLIST SyntaxSHOW SLAVE HOSTS SyntaxSHOW SLAVE STATUS SyntaxSHOW STATUS SyntaxSHOW TABLE STATUS SyntaxSHOW TABLES SyntaxSHOW VARIABLES SyntaxSHOW WARNINGS Syntax
SHOW has many forms that provide
information about databases, tables, columns, or status
information about the server. This section describes those
following:
SHOW {BINARY | MASTER} LOGS
SHOW BINLOG EVENTS [IN 'log_name'] [FROM pos] [LIMIT [offset,] row_count]
SHOW CHARACTER SET [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW COLLATION [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW [FULL] COLUMNS FROM tbl_name [FROM db_name] [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW CREATE DATABASE db_name
SHOW CREATE TABLE tbl_name
SHOW DATABASES [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW ENGINE engine_name {LOGS | STATUS }
SHOW [STORAGE] ENGINES
SHOW ERRORS [LIMIT [offset,] row_count]
SHOW GRANTS FOR user
SHOW INDEX FROM tbl_name [FROM db_name]
SHOW INNODB STATUS
SHOW [BDB] LOGS
SHOW MASTER STATUS
SHOW OPEN TABLES
SHOW PRIVILEGES
SHOW [FULL] PROCESSLIST
SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
SHOW SLAVE STATUS
SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] STATUS [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW TABLE STATUS [FROM db_name] [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW TABLES [FROM db_name] [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW [GLOBAL | SESSION] VARIABLES [LIKE 'pattern']
SHOW WARNINGS [LIMIT [offset,] row_count]
If the syntax for a given SHOW
statement includes a LIKE
' part,
pattern'' is a
string that can contain the SQL
“pattern'%” and
“_” wildcard characters. The
pattern is useful for restricting statement output to matching
values.
Many MySQL APIs (such as PHP) enable you to treat the result
returned from a SHOW statement as
you would a result set from a
SELECT; see
Chapter 17, Connectors and APIs, or your API documentation for
more information.

User Comments
A note on privileges
The privileges of the SHOW command appear to derive from those of SELECT.
If the user has SELECT privileges, then SHOW will be successful, and if not, will
be unsuccessful, with an error message, viz:
mysql> show tables in mysql;
ERROR 1044 (42000): Access denied for user 'user'@'localhost' to database 'mysql'
Another way to look at this connection: SHOW is a shorthand for SELECT.
It appears that DESCRIBE is also a shorthand for SELECT and derives its
privileges from that command.
Add your own comment.